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#21 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Right behind you. -NRA Member-
Posts: 1,434
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Well thanks for that intel Teenagegunwacho. I guess if I was lost Id just take out my coleman stove and cook up some mre's. Then pitch my 8 man tent lay out my sleeping bag and blow up my air mattress plug in my color tv with portable dvd player into the generator and bake some brownies in the port-a-oven.
Course if you didnt have your lighter your ruger your knife for whatever reason how well would you?
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The only thing that helps me maintain my grip on reality is my friendship with my singing potatoes" |
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#23 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: New York
Posts: 1,488
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Quote:
There would be a lot fewer people found dead in the woods after getting lost if more of them just sat down, had themselves a cigarette, and thought things through before taking any action. Taking the wrong action when you are a mite bewildered (as Dan'l Boone used to say) is often worse than taking no action at all. |
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#26 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Fort Collins, CO
Posts: 347
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If you have a river or small stream you can catch a fish with rocks (sorry, should have used plural), by building a trap. You can either create a small dam that would stop them from moving any further or a funnel trap that they will go into and not be able to swim out of. It is a trap that can keep on working if done correctly.
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Kel-Tec P11 Mossberg 500A Tactical 12 ga. 1947 Mosin Nagant M44 Yugo SKS 59/66 |
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#27 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: MS
Posts: 398
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This Post has really had me thinking alot about things that we take for granted.
I would have no problems starting a fire and catching food whether it be by killing animals or catching fish. The problem i can't seem to figure out is once I have killed a deer for example. How would I go about preserving the meat??? We usually would quarter out all the meat and freeze it or at least keep it on ice. I've been thinking all day about packing all my survival gear up and going camping to refresh my survival skillz. Usually I carry ice chest, and food, and tents, but I hope to bring nothing but a few energy bars and catch everything else. We have a piece of land my dad owns a few miles from my house that has a good sice creek/river on it. |
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#28 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: N. Texas
Posts: 201
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In this part of the country, it's pretty hard to walk very long without coming across a road of some kind, providing you compensate for the natural tendency to walk in a circle. The critical thing for short-term survival obviously is water.
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#29 (permalink) | |
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Banned
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Quote:
Five miles is a long, long way when walking is an issue. |
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#30 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Kalifornia
Posts: 95
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I know that i'd be able to survive. My brothers and I regularly practice our survival skills when we go camping, or just fishing. we also enjoy reading up on what to do in different situations. we've taken courses in survival.
we can build shelters for the cold, or heat, deserts, mountians, barren areas all of us know multiple ways to build fires without matches we know by sight plants in N. America that are edible, or have medicinal uses can track animals, though i'm not a pro catch fish w/ makshift nets or traps regularly practice tying knots, and use them frequently can find water can do all this with a knife , paracord, sometimes carry an E-tool Last edited by bellx1; 05-21-2008 at 08:50 PM. |
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#31 (permalink) | |
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Banned
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Quote:
how to make biltong - Yahoo! Search Results |
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#32 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 376
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Quote:
__________________
Save the drama for your mama! |
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#33 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Rogers, Arkansas
Posts: 191
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A cool attitude is the first thing in survival, not to panic over the situation. Always carry some type of multitool because you never know when it may save your life. my 2 cents worth.
Mike
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![]() ![]() KEEP YOUR POWDER DRY |
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#36 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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Quote:
I got lost in the mountains one year deer hunting. It was about sundown when I started to go to camp and headed to where I thought camp was. I walked by a rotting tree that had fell, and later I came to what looked like the same tree. I went on and the third time I saw what looked like the same tree, I realized it was the same tree. I was walking in a circle though I thought I was going straight. I sat down on the tree and started assessing the situation. I knew if I was to get out of the mountains I was going to have to walk straight. It was getting dark and the mountains looked all the same and when you walked over a peak and down in a valley you would loose sight of any landmarks. As I sat thinking, I could hear what sounded like a cow bell in the far distance. I started toward the sound. When I got to it, some cows was walking up a logging road in the mountains, and I followed them until I came to a main road and then walked out. There is no substitute for using your head in any kind of emergency situation.
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Calvin Wiles !!! HAPPY AND SAFE SHOOTING
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#37 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Southern New Mexico
Posts: 264
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I am an eagle scout and I got the wilderness survival merit badge so I think that counts for something
. All I would need is a good pocket knife to survive. Just watch a few episodes of man vs. wild with Bear Grills and you will learn a lot about survival.
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There are two kinds of people in this world. Those who have guns and those who dig. You dig.
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#38 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 14
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I got lost one year deer hunting in the UP (northern Mich). It was in the upper 20s, 6-8 inches of snow and light snow coming down. I knew I was about 1.5 miles from our camper but other than that I had no idea which way to go. My compass had gotten broke and that is not a good feeling. i decided to hunker down for the night as I knew I could find my way out next morning. I built a shelter, and started a fire. About 3 hours later I heard noises and saw a light - it was the guys I was hunting with. When they got to me they could not believe how well prepared I was to spend the night in a cedar swamp. i always carry survival items in a pack of somesort - usually a fanny pack - when I go out for a day of hunting.
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